Data from: Environmental influence on growth history in marine benthic foraminifera
Energy availability influences natural selection on the ontogenetic histories of organisms. However, it remains unclear if physiological controls on size remain constant throughout ontogeny or instead shift as organisms grow larger. Benthic foraminifera provide an opportunity to quantify and interpr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Energy availability influences natural selection on the ontogenetic
histories of organisms. However, it remains unclear if physiological
controls on size remain constant throughout ontogeny or instead shift as
organisms grow larger. Benthic foraminifera provide an opportunity to
quantify and interpret the physicochemical controls on both initial
(proloculus) and adult volumes across broad environmental gradients using
first principles of cell physiology. Here, we measured proloculus and
adult test dimensions of 129 modern rotaliid species from published images
of holotype specimens using holotype size to represent the maximum size of
all species’ occurrences across the North American continental margin. We
merged size data with mean annual temperature, dissolved oxygen
concentration, particulate organic carbon flux, and seawater calcite
saturation for 718 unique localities to quantify the relationship between
physicochemical variables and among-species adult/proloculus size ratios.
We find that correlation of community mean adult/proloculus size ratios
with environmental parameters reflects co-variation of adult test volume
with environmental conditions. Among-species proloculus sizes do not
co-vary identifiably with environmental conditions, consistent with the
expectation that environmental constraints on organism size impose
stronger selective pressures on adult forms due to lower surface
area-to-volume ratios at larger sizes. Among-species adult/proloculus size
ratios of foraminifera occurring in resource-limited environments are
constrained by the limiting resource in addition to temperature.
Identified limiting resources are food in oligotrophic waters and oxygen
in oxygen minimum zones. Because among-species variations in
adult/proloculus size ratios from the North American continental margin
are primarily driven by the local environment’s influence on adult sizes,
the evolution of foraminiferal sizes over the Phanerozoic may have been
strongly influenced by changing oceanographic conditions. Furthermore,
lack of correspondence between among-species proloculus sizes and
environmental conditions suggests that offspring size in foraminifera are
rarely limited by physiological constraints and are more susceptible to
selection related to other aspects of fitness. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.d5p86fp |